APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session 1A: Industrial Physics Forum: History, Current Status, Future Prospects
1:00 PM–3:00 PM,
Sunday, March 20, 2011
Room: Ballroom C1
Sponsoring
Unit:
FIAP
Chair: Robert Doering, Texas Instruments
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.1A.3
Abstract: 1A.00003 : From BCS to Vortices: A 40 Year Personal Journey through Superconductivity from Basic Research to Power Applications
2:20 PM–3:00 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Paul M. Grant
(IBM Research Staff Member Emeritus, San Jose, CA 95120 USA)
A century has passed since the discovery of superconductivity in
Leiden
followed 75 years later by the Great Leap Forward in \underline
{Zuerich}.\footnote{``20th Anniversary of the Woodstock of
Physics,'' APS March Meeting 2007, Denver, CO.} This talk will
chronicle the author's trajectory through
the science and technology of superconductivity first taking off
with his
IBM career in fundamental research on organic and layered copper
oxide
perovskite superconductors to a final landing at EPRI to explore
applications of the latter to the electric power industry.
Although many
fundamental mysteries remain with respect to the copper and iron
compounds,
especially regarding the BCS pairing mechanism, nonetheless a
significant
number of successful demonstrations of cables, rotating
machinery, storage
and power conditioning equipment employing both low-and high-T$_{C}$
superconducting \underline {materials}\footnote{P. M. Grant, IEEE
Trans. Appl. Supercon. \textbf{7}, 112 (1997).} have been
undertaken worldwide
since the decade of the 1960s to the present. However, massive
application
to the power industry has yet to take place or be inserted into
utility
long-range planning \underline {cycles}.\footnote{P. M. Grant,
``Superconductivity in Power Applications,'' submitted to the
ICEC-ICMC 2010 Conference Proceedings.} Although there will
certainly
be a relatively small number of opportunistic deployments in those
situations where superconductivity has a compelling advantage over
conventional technology, its time will more likely await a future
revolution
in energy and electricity infrastructure such as a \underline
{symbiosis}\footnote{P. M. Grant, C. Starr and T. J. Overbye, ``A
Power Grid for the Hydrogen Economy,'' Scientific American, July
2006, p.76.} of nuclear and hydrogen with superconductivity. Perhaps
the distant future will even deliver the \underline
{dream}\footnote{P. M. Grant, Physics Today, May 1998.} of a room
temperature superconductor.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.1A.3